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II The Prisoner 1 MY father
had a
farm two miles west of the town. He owned quite a trac' of land there —
seven
or eight hundred acres — and was one of the leading men of the county.
I
suppose he was worth nearly a hundred thousand dollars. That seemed
like great
wealth then, but it wouldn’t carry ten yards in Wall Street now. Harper's Ferry was a dandy town in those days. Oh! it was beautiful, and the government had put up the finest kind of shops for gun-makin'. Dude fellers worked there, and they could earn as high as four or five dollars a day at piece work. They'd go in wearin' their best clothes and shift to their work clothes in a special room. At the end of the day they washed up and changed their clothes, and when they came out you'd think they were just comin' out of church. On that Sunday night in the autumn of 1859 when Brown captured the armory I went down to a protracted meetin' at the Harper's Ferry Methodist Church. I was seventeen years old. Me 'n' another young feller rode down on horseback. It was a big thing hyar then to have a protracted meetin'. There'd be a meetin' every evenin' for two or three weeks except Saturday. That evenin' we'd rest up, and we'd have an extra hot time on Sunday night. People would come from all directions, there'd be several preachers, and the church would be crowded. Up in
front under
the pulpit was a long wooden bench, and the mourners knelt on either
side of it
tryin' to git religion. Whether people were religious or not they had a
curiosity to go and see the mourners; and the ministers used to say,
"It'll break up the meetin' if somebody don't come to the mourners'
bench." Those that
went up
there were usually all young people from twelve to twenty years old,
and
perhaps there'd be a dozen or more down on their knees at the same time
shoutin' and prayin': "O Lord, have mercy on me! O God, help me!" While they
went on
that way the ministers and elders talked among 'em and prayed over 'em.
A good
many of 'em were cryin', and a heap of the congregation would be
cryin', too.
There was singin' goin' on all the time, and the leaders would whoop
and holler
over the mourners, only stoppin' occasionally to ask 'em, "Now do you
think you've given up to the Lord?" When one
of 'em
said, "Yes," he'd jump up and go to singin'. We had a
lively
time that Sunday evenin' I was speakin' of, and it was about twelve
o'clock
when us two fellers got on our horses to ride home. I remember it was a
dark
night and cool. On the way we overtook half a dozen men walkin', and
they had
blankets throwed around 'em. I found out later that they were some of
Brown's
raiders and that they wore the blankets to hide their weapons. After I
got home I
went to bed and to sleep, but I hadn’t been sleepin' long when I heard
a
rappin' ag'in' the door that opened from the yard into the room where
Father
and Mother slept. I thought some tramp was there and I expected to hear
him ask
if he could sleep in the barn. "What do
you
want?" Father said. Then a man
outside
said, "Git up and open the door"; and after some more talkin' back
and forth the door was busted right open with a rail, and the man
walked in. I had a
long old
country shotgun that I kep' loaded, and I thought I'd take it down
there and
order the feller out. of course, I was some scared, but you'd want to
go and
see what was goin' on if some one had broken into your daddy's room,
wouldn’t
you? My aunt
and sister
had waked up, and they put their heads out of an upstairs window and
hollered,
"Murder!" But they got back out of the way quick when a colored man
in the yard said he'd blow their heads off if they didn’t shut that
window. I slept'
up at the
head of some steps that went down from the second story right into
Father's
room, and I had got my gun ready when my aunt peeked down the steps. "For
gracious
sake! don't take that gun down there," she said. "The man in your
father's room is all armed. He's got revolvers in his belt, and he's
got a gun
besides. He'll just think you're goin' to kill him, and he'll kill
you." So I put
back my
gun and went along without it. I made a pretty heavy noise goin' down
the
steps, and the man turned to look and drawed his gun on me — click,
click!
"Come on," he said, and I came. A white
man and a big
yeller colored feller were there, and they had pine torches, and the
sparks
flew all over the floor. I stamped some of the sparks out my with foot.
"What you
goin' to do?" I asked. "My name
is
Stevens," the white man said, "and I'm under the orders of Captain
John Brown. We're goin' to free all the slaves." I talked
back to
him right smart, and I was a little sassy, for I was on my own ground. "Why don't
you
hush, Tommy?" Mother said. "Captain Brown has taken the government
works at Harper's Ferry," Stevens told us. "That
wasn’t
much to do," I said. "They only have one watchman there." "You shut
your
mouth or I'll blow your brains out," he said. Then the
colored
feller collared me and drawed a revolver and held it ag'in' my breast.
That
made me kind of nervous. I couldn’t do nothin', and I said to myself,
"You've got me now." They took
Father
and me out to the road where four more of their men were and a
four-horse farm
wagon and a two-horse carriage. They'd been up the road and got Colonel
Washington,
one of the leading planters of the region, and were takin' him to
Harper's
Ferry in his own carriage driven by one of his slaves. The wagon was
his, too,
and there were a number of his slaves standin' up in it. Our slaves
lived in
a wing of our house. Stevens had 'em roused up, and he selected half a
dozen
and told 'em he was goin' to set 'em free, and that they must come
along with
him in the wagon. They kep' very quiet and it didn’t seem like they
wanted to
go. The
raiders were
careful not to take their torchlights out to the road, and the
neighbors never
saw or heard a thing. My mother and sister and aunt came out to the
fence, and
they were very uneasy. Father and I had to git into the wagon with the
slaves.
We stood near the front. The procession started with Colonel Washington
in his
carriage goin' ahead. A colored man drove our horses. He sat on the
left wheel
horse and did the guidin' with a single line. That's the way we drive
our work
teams hyar. When we
got to
Harper's Ferry everything was quiet as a mouse. "What's the matter?
"Father said. "Is every one in the town killed?" "Oh, no!"
I said, "I reckon not." We drove
in the
armory yard to the engine house and got out. Then Stevens delivered us
over to
an old man who was there with a gun, and said, "This is Captain John
Brown." "Yes, I'm
Osawatomie Brown of Kansas," Brown said. He was a
tolerable
large man, rough, and coarse-featured, and a little overbearing and
rude in his
conversation. He gave each of our colored men a spear. I believe he
called it a
pike. It had a han'le like a pitchfork, and on one end was an iron
concern the
shape of a butcher knife exactly, but sharpened on both edges. Brown
had any
quantity of 'em. "You take these pikes," he said to our slaves,
"and don't let the prisoners git off the pavement in front of the
engine
house." But the
slaves
didn’t 'mount to nothin' as a help to Brown. When his back was turned
they'd
set down their spears, but if they see old John Brown comin' they'd
pick 'em up
and tend to business. By and by
it got to
be time to ring the armory bell, and the bell-ringer come right on in.
Stevens
checked him, and said, "Where you goin'?" "I'm goin'
to
ring that bell," the man said, and started to walk along. But
Stevens give
him a gouge with his gun. The gun was a tarnal heavy one, and it broke
some of
the old man's ribs, and he fell. Later the citizens were allowed to
carry him
away. After it
was
daylight the townspeople began to come to see what was the matter at
the
armory, and as soon as they got opposite the yard gate one of Brown's
men would
say, "Come in hyar," and he'd run 'em right in so they couldn’t go
back to tell the news. Presently
Brown had
one of his men go and order the hotel landlord to send over breakfast
for the
raiders and their prisoners — eighty-five in all, I think. He didn’t
pay then
or afterward, and the landlord later got an attachment on Brown's horse
and
wagon and sold 'em for the bill. A colored
servant
brought the food. There was butter and rolls and coffee. Some of the
prisoners
was so scared they couldn’t eat. Father was a little afraid there might
be
poison in the food, and I said to one of our darkies, "Bill, are you
goin'
to eat this?" "Yes, sir,
I'm
goin' to try it," he answered. "Well," I
said, "go ahead and I'll see what it does to you." It didn’t
seem to
have any bad effect, and then I ate, and I didn’t have nothin' more to
eat till
after Brown's Fort, the fire-engine house, was captured. Brown
stood around
or walked backwards and forwards waiting for reinforcements. That was
where he
got fooled, you know. The feller who fooled him was one of his own men
by the
name of Cook. Cook come hyar peddlin' maps, and he got acquainted with
an old
widow lady, Mrs. McGregor. She got him a job of tendin' a lock on the
canal.
The old lady had a niece named Jane Kennedy who lived a few miles over
in
Maryland, and this niece come visitin' her Aunt McGregor. Cook got to
sparkin'
her, and by and by they married. Later he taught in the Harper's Ferry
public
schools. He claimed
he had
gone around notifyin' the slaves what Brown intended to do, and he made
Brown
believe that all the darkies in the whole country would rush right in
hyar
ready to fight for their freedom under Brown's command. But Cook hadn’t
done as
much notifyin' as he pretended he had, and the darkies would have been
too
skeery, anyway. There were too many guns in the road. They are not a
fightin'
race, and those of 'em who became soldiers in the war only fought well
when
they had the advantage. Let the enemy bung it into 'em and kill a few,
and the
others scattered and run. So Brown never had much use for the fourteen
hundred
spears that he had had made to arm the colored recruits he expected. We began
to hear
shootin' soon after breakfast, and by nine or ten o'clock they were
crackin'
away fast. The citizens got up in the houses and fired, and they Shot
down from
the hills. If any of the men at the engine house so much as peeped
around a
corner the citizens let loose at 'em. After a
while Brown
sent Stevens on some errand to the hotel, and had him take along a
prisoner so
he wouldn’t be fired on. They had nearly reached the hotel when a
colored boy
at the engine house pointed to an upper window in the tavern not far
from the
bridge and said, "Look, look! there are two men up there and they're
goin'
to shoot." That same
instant
one of the men punched a pane of glass out, and pop went his gun. A
raider by
the name of Coppic had joined the colored boy, and he remarked,
"They've
shot Stevens." "I'm sorry
for
that," Brown said. "Is he dead?" "No,"
Coppic answered, "he's fallen down, but he's movin' yet. Now he's got
up
on one knee. His prisoner has walked right on — glad to git away, I
guess." "Look!"
the boy exclaimed, "they're goin' to shoot again." They
fired, and
Stevens didn’t git up that time. He lay there near half an hour, and
then Miss
Foulke, the hotel landlord's sister, who was a very kind-hearted woman,
got
some men to take him up and put him in bed at the hotel. She arranged,
too, for
a heavy guard of militia, or the citizens would have gone right in
there and
killed him. He was quite a loss to the raiders, for, next to Brown, he
was the
ablest man in the bunch. But he was a mean devil and had been rough to
the
prisoners. Yes, he was a bad one. For a
while we took
refuge in a watchhouse that was joined on to the engine house, but it
had a lot
of windows, and the balls came through the glass. Then Brown selected
fifteen
or twenty of the prisoners and took 'em into the engine house. He left
the
balance to do as they pleased, and pretty soon he said, "Listen at 'em
gettin' out." They climbed through a back window and skedaddled. We were
jammed in
the engine house pretty close. There were too many for the space. A dog
that
belonged to Brown was with us. He was a big black dog with a white
stripe down
his face, and he had white feet. The bullets was flyin' around there
hot, and
the raiders fastened the large double door with ropes so it would only
open a
little — just enough to Shoot through. Brown had
one of
our colored men take a pick and dig three or four portholes through the
walls.
As the darky was gettin' out the last brick a bullet hit it and knocked
it in
and keeled him over. Early in
the
afternoon Father was lookin' out, and he says: "There's Colonel Beckham
walkin' on the railroad trustle. I wonder what he's doin' that for." Beckham
was the
station-agent and the mayor of the town. Where he was walkin' there was
a long
platform extendin' from the depot up along the Potomac. That platform
was the
great promenade of the townspeople. Pretty soon Beckham got behind the
water-tank and took a peek around the end. Brown had ordered his men
not to
fire at any one who was unarmed, but Beckham's peeking made Coppic, who
was
watching, think he was goin' to shoot. So Coppic fired. "Did you
git
him?" Brown asked. "No,"
Coppic said, "but if he peeks again I'll make sure of him by letting my
bullet nip a corner of the tank." Beckham
peeked, and
Coppic fired, and Beckham fell right out from behind the tank and lay
still. The
militia could
easily have taken the engine house, for there were only five raiders
inside,
but they didn’t have the nerve to storm it. Besides, Brown had the
advantage of
'em in holding us prisoners. We were kep' for to protect his men. He
knew the
besiegers would be careful about shootin' and assaultin' lest they hurt
their
friends. Late in
the evenin'
Watson Brown was lookin' out of the door, and sightin' his gun at a
feller just
opposite. That feller had seen Watson and was gittin' ready to take a
shot,
too, and Watson didn’t shoot quick enough. A bullet hit him, and he
jumped
back. He had his finger on the trigger of his gun, and in jumping he
gave the gun
a jerk that made it go off. He was hit in the stomach, and he suffered
awfully.
After
Watson was
shot the raiders barred the door and pushed one of the fire-engines up
ag'in'
it, and there we stayed quiet as a lamb all night listenin' to the men
jabberin'
outside of the gate and to the shootin' that was done off and on to
prevent
Brown from attemptin' to git out. I thought that was the longest night
ever I
spent. We didn't have any light in there, so it was dark as a dungeon,
and we
just lay on the brick floor, or set down and leaned up ag'in' the wall
and
nodded. Some of the colored fellers were snorin' away, but the rest of
us
couldn’t sleep. Young
Brown lay in
a corner. "Oh kill me and put me out of this sufferin'!" he'd beg his
father. But old
Brown would
tell him to quit his noise, and "die like a man." Toward
mornin' old
Brown, who was sittin' near the door, called to his son and got no
answer.
"I guess he's dead," the old man said. The
marines were on
hand in the morning, and an officer came to the engine house door.
Brown opened
it wide enough to talk to him. The officer said Brown might as well
surrender.
But Brown said, "I ain't a-goin' to do it." "I've got
sixty men out hyar, and I'll make you do it," the officer told him. "All
right," Brown said, and shut the door. Then the
officer
ordered his men to take sledges and batter the door down, That didn’t
succeed,
and they got a heavy ladder and rammed it ag'in' the door. They rammed
a second
time, and some of the raiders fired out of the portholes and killed one
of the
marines and wounded another. But they rammed again and busted the door
wide
enough open so a man could squeeze through it. While this was goin' on
we
prisoners set there scared and shiverin'. Lieutenant
Green
got inside first, and Brown was about to shoot him when the officer cut
at the
old man with his saber, and by havin' the science he knocked the gun up
so it
went off above him. His next stroke knocked Brown pretty senseless, and
if
Green had been a little nearer he'd have taken Brown's head off. That
sweeping
stroke just grazed my father and cut his hat-band. Green apologized
afterward
and wanted to git him a new hat, but Father wouldn’t hear to such a
thing. Coppic and
the
other raiders threw down their guns and surrendered, except one colored
feller.
This darky jumped up and said, "I'm one of the citizen prisoners." "No you
ain't," the officer said, and took him along with the others. Brown
couldn’t
walk, and the marines carried him out and laid him on the grass. They
formed a
circle around him with their bayonets ready so he couldn’t be harmed.
"Stand back, men," they'd say to the crowd. I went
into a store
where Father dealt and got some crackers and cheese to eat, and I
stayed in the
town till night. The people liked to have talked me to death. "Hyar,
tell
us how you was arrested and all about it," they'd say. They kep' at me
and
would hardly let me away. I got home
a little
befo' sundown, and I tell you I was Sleepy, for I hadn’t slep' none to
speak of
for two nights. My father had returned earlier, so Mother and the rest
of the
family knew we were safe, and they were all contented when I arrived. One of our
colored
men was caught at the armory with a gun and was taken to Charlestown
jail. He
got the typhoid fever in the jail and died there. Us young
fellers
would ride to Charlestown of a Sunday to see the prisoners. The jailer
let a
squad of four or five of us go in at a time, and he'd say: "Don't make
'em
mad. Don't say anything mean to 'em." Brown was
very
quiet and never said much more than: "How do
you
do. Nice day," or something of that sort. I saw
Stevens, and
I remarked, "S'pose you know me." "No,
indeed,
no, indeed!" he replied. "You broke
in
our house," I said, "and took me and Father prisoners." "You're
just
as much mistaken as if you'd lost your hat," he said. He was
gritty, and,
from all I saw, I can say that Brown and his men were none of 'em
cowardly. ______________ 1 While my host talked
we sat in one
of the rooms of the farmhouse that had been his father's at the time of
the
historic raid. The dwelling was rather forlornly neglected in its
aspect, and
we were in a wing that had been the slave quarters. Walls and ceiling
and
everything in the room were darkened with an appalling accumulation of
smoke
and grime. The day was rainy, and my companion wore rubber boots. He
was tall
and thin, and, though no longer young, was still dark-haired and
keen-eyed. |